In Netflix's Dahmer, Incompetent Police Fail To Catch a Serial Killer
The show depicts the killer's gruesome crimes but lays some of the blame on the Milwaukee police who failed for so long to catch him.

On September 21, Netflix released its latest docudrama, Dahmer—Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story. In 10 episodes, the series tells the story of one of the 20th century's most notorious and depraved serial murderers, with a particular focus on his victims. The Netflix synopsis wonders, "Across more than a decade, 17 teen boys and young men were murdered by convicted killer Jeffrey Dahmer. How did he evade arrest for so long?" The show points a portion of the blame at the police themselves.
The show opens on Glenda Cleveland (Niecy Nash), a single mother who lived next door to Dahmer (Evan Peters) in Milwaukee. She grimaces as she overhears unsettling noises from her neighbor's apartment and smells putrid odors through the shared vent. Dahmer goes out to a bar and brings a man, Tracy, home with him. Almost immediately, the vibe turns threatening, but Tracy manages to escape and flags down a patrol car. While initially skeptical, the officers investigate the apartment and find the remains of numerous victims. Dahmer is hauled away to prison, and all is right.
Except as the rest of the series demonstrates, all is not quite right: As Dahmer is escorted out in handcuffs, Cleveland shouts, "I called y'all, and I told you over and over a million times that something was going on, and you know what you did? Y'all did nothing!"
Indeed, the real-life Cleveland alerted authorities to the suspicious activities of her neighbor at least two months before Dahmer's arrest. As depicted in episode 2 of the Netflix series, Tracy was not Dahmer's first victim to escape: In May 1991, Cleveland's daughter and niece found Konerak Sinthasomphone, a 14-year-old Laotian boy, in an alley, naked and in distress. Nicole Childress, Cleveland's niece, called 911, who sent officers and an ambulance.
But Dahmer arrived on the scene as well, advising officers that Sinthasomphone was 19 and that the two were romantically involved. Dahmer explained that Sinthasomphone, who did not speak during the interaction, was drunk and that they had had a fight. Paramedics thought Sinthasomphone needed treatment, but the officers disagreed and sent the ambulance away. Rather than probe further, the officers returned Sinthasomphone to Dahmer's apartment and left. Afterward, they radioed back to the precinct, amid laughter, "The intoxicated Asian male was returned to his sober boyfriend." One quipped, "My partner is going to get deloused at the station."
As it would turn out, Sinthasomphone was nonverbal because, before his escape, Dahmer had drilled a hole into the boy's skull and poured acid into his brain. After police returned him to the apartment, Dahmer killed him.
As soon as police left, Cleveland began calling repeatedly to ask for more details. She offered her daughter and niece as witnesses, but the responding officers indicated, "It was an intoxicated boyfriend of another boyfriend…It wasn't a child. It was an adult." Finally, when Cleveland persisted, the officer replied "Ma'am. Ma'am. I can't make it any more clear. It's all taken care of. He is with his boyfriend, in his boyfriend's apartment… I can't do anything about somebody's sexual preference in life." In the incident report, the officers reportedly deemed the situation a "domestic squabble between homosexuals."
Four more victims were killed between Sinthasomphone's death and Dahmer's eventual capture. Dahmer would later tell police that when the boy was returned to the apartment, photos of previous victims were strewn around the floor and a body was in the bedroom "smelling like hell." And if police had run a background check on Dahmer, they would have seen that at the time, he was on probation for sexually assaulting Sinthasomphone's brother three years earlier, when he was 13.
The show depicts Dahmer behaving with a certain carelessness, as if he doesn't need to try particularly hard to cover his tracks. When Cleveland brings up the awful smell coming from his apartment, he shrugs her off: His tropical fish just died, so that's probably what it is. When the officers question him about Tracy, he tries the same tactic: "We're homosexuals," this is just "gay stuff." In each case, it seems clear that similar explanations have worked in the past.
Dahmer escaped suspicion by drawing most of his victims from the fringes, mostly gay racial minorities. As such, the show lays some of the blame on police for seemingly not caring enough about marginalized populations to sufficiently investigate. In fact, the real story is almost too unbelievable for dramatization: After Dahmer's arrest, the city fired the two officers who returned Sinthasomphone and joked about them afterward. But they were later reinstated on appeal, each receiving around $55,000 in back pay. A decade later, one of the officers, John Balcerzak, was even elected president of Milwaukee's police union, a position he held for four years.
Unfortunately, as Dahmer demonstrates, police failure to intervene when explicitly necessary is not new. All too often, police cannot be relied upon to protect the public and, in fact, are not even required to. As the Supreme Court ruled in DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services (1989): "Nothing in the language of the Due Process Clause itself requires the State to protect the life, liberty, and property of its citizens against invasion by private actors."
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So Dahmer... What's eating you anyway?!?!?
Long pig... It's what's for dinner!
The other other white meat.
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Clearly you missed the part of him going after gay blacks
We need to learn from the modern Germans!!!!
One does not have the “personal freedom” to contractually allow oneself to be killed and eaten. This has been legally established now, in Germany, at least.
See http://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/dec/04/germany.lukeharding ... Names were Meiwes and Brandes... Legal consent was all drawn up. "Victim of cannibal agreed to be eaten"... That eats me up pretty badly!
But you know those Germans! They have a bad history of sometimes strangely restricting your personal freedoms!
Well, things like killing and slavery do kinda negate the possibility of future contracts, so in this case, the Germans got it right.
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What if the killing is the actual service?
I used to check my mail a few miles from where he picked someone up in Colorado.
I’m really fed up with Dahmer puns.
What’s eating you?
I’m just chewsy is all!
Dahmer didn't like clowns - they tasted funny, he said.
But not if the clown is gay, see?
Did Dahmer have a run-in with John Wayne Gary? This I didn't know.
Would a Dahmer first person combat game be in poor taste?
It woud be tasteless from my end because I wouldn't buy or play the damn thing.
Harmless consenting adult fun on Skyrim is my limit. Even then, I'd only eat Hot Pockets.
Not Gary, Gacy. Even Edit buttons don't help clumsy fingers.
Is there a better expression of trust than a gay cannibal?
"After Dahmer's arrest, the city fired the two officers who returned Sinthasomphone and joked about them afterward. But they were later reinstated on appeal, each receiving around $55,000 in back pay. A decade later, one of the officers, John Balcerzak, was even elected president of Milwaukee's police union, a position he held for four years."
You're kidding, right? Please tell me you're kidding.
In principle, I don't see anything morally objectionable about executing Dahmer after due process.
Maybe the system simply cannot be trusted to execute *anyone,* but this would not be on account of the sacredness of the killer's life (the focus should be on the value of his victims' lives).
If the death penalty is wrong, it's wrong because the American judicial system is unreliable, not because "hurr durr, prolife."
"...If the death penalty is wrong, it’s wrong because the American judicial system is unreliable, not because “hurr durr, prolife.”"
Yes.
There are people who ought to be killed, but we can't trust the judicial system to tell us who they are.
No judicial system is going to be 100% reliable when it comes to the death penalty. But that doesn't mean it shouldn't be included as an option for punishment for extraordinarily heinous crimes. The dumbest part isn't the degree of unreliability, it's the years and often decades of appeals and court processes that are the main issue, which just drags the whole thing out for no good reason. The appeals process for death penalty cases needs to be streamlined, with clear-cut deadlines for each stage and provisos that a lack of response by those deadines means that the appeals official assents to the execution. That will prevent bleeding-heart governors and Presidents from sitting on the appeal request for decades.
Dahmer's about as clear-cut of a slam-dunk case for getting executed as there ever was, just like Ted Bundy and Timothy McVeigh were, and like the Manson family should have been. The appeals process should have been done within about six months, followed by a proper neck-stretching on the courthouse lawn.
"Nothing in the language of the Due Process Clause itself requires the State to protect the life, liberty, and property of its citizens against invasion by private actors."
Apply this principle to Title IX. Somehow the state has asserted schools have a responsibility to protect women from private actors even though it isn't responsible for its most basic function. The discrepancy shows the bureaucracy claims the right to do whatever it wants to do (and only that), and while it isn't much interested in protecting people it sure is interested in revenge on men who have made a woman unhappy.
Dahmer was disgusting. Real cannibals have sex with women like normal people.
Fine Young Cannibals seemed pretty hetero. But I don't know for sure.
They're a Good Thing that Drives Me Crazy! So I understand, they swing both ways, both The Raw and The Cooked! 😉
Kind of like the Golden State Killer in California. They almost had him early on, but he was beyond suspicion because he was a cop.
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On the flip side, the police do deal a lot of squabbles between gay couples. They were probably afraid of being called homophobic and getting sued.
During the early 90s? Doubtful. No one gave a shit about being accused of homophobia back then.
I really don't need or care to know more about Jeff Dahmer. Thanks anyway, Netflix.